Marks, yes, but "machine tool marks"?
I keep on and on trying to press you on supplying not only evidence for this machining, but you won't even supply any sort of elaboration of what you have said regarding the machining of stones making up the Great Pyramid, the actual tools that you have said DID this machining. You have repeatedly described them as "belt-driven power tools" using as their power animals, strength, or water. I have addressed this as being patently absurd, and have repeatedly said, as I did about the Roman cranes you so cavalierly discounted, that sheer and slow mechanical force from humans, animals, cranes, pulleys, levers, etc. constituted the motive power.
How could a donkey trot fast enough or a human do, well, what action, running, rotating his hands, what (?), to supply the RPMs necessary, with the cutting edge you describe as being made of some mystery material?
To echo my eloquent initial response to your demand that the value of Pi was a necessity for the construction of the pyramids, and furthermore that Pi was unknown in antiquity: WWWWWWWWWWHHHHHHHHHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAATTTTTTTTTTTTT????????!!!!!!!!!
I then offered a cooler response to your Pi hypothesis, and have here and elsewhere about these "belt-driven power tools." You have said you don't mean they were powered by gas or electricity, so elaborate on this animal/human/water power for these tools. I mean, bring in the Nile if you need to, but give me some specifics.
"...........more than enough to destroy the currently accepted view of how these things were done." So, your second paragraph in your last post "destroys" what is "currently accepted"? AAAAARRRRRGGGGG!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Machining of the blocks by these power tools destroys what is accepted?
You're back on square one, Gordon.
And I have addressed "bashing with copper" as a primary means of construction of the pyramids.
You and Pixel offer NO specifics or elaboration. You just invoke something else and you know what I mean. That is a refuge taken in frustration.
I really want specifics, Gordon. Kim